Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887, May 13, 1887, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
WILLAMETTE FARMER: SALEM, OREGON, MAY 13, 1887
JACK'S ATONEMENT.
Within another two hours Leo wai
to surrender und IViieo to plumo hor
win go for an enrly flight over tlio dis
tracted country. Wo got tho order:
Forwnrdl" "Trot?" "Girilop!"
"Chixrgol" nnd away tho squadrons
wont, sabre flashing, senhhards rat
tling, nnd almost ever' man cheering
ns ho dashed Into tho face of death. I
heard tho bullets ing! ping! about my
cars tho cheers roso louder a battery
opened its cross-fire, nnd then every
thing turned black to me and I lost all
consciousness of what was going on.
When I opened my eyes nnd eamo
back to life, as it were, I heard tho
Bounds of strife, but they were reced
ing. It was daylight ngain, with tho
April sun shining down through tho
powder cloud. My horso was beside
me, di'ad, half a dozen men were lying
close by,somo dead and sonio grievous
ly wounded, nnd within nrnrs length
wns tho man who had gone into the
chargu ut my right hand, ltn was ono
of my own company, but none of us
know him very well, and if tho muster
roll gavo him any other unmo but Jack
wo did not know it I had n wound in
tho shoulder from tho splinter of a
shell, while another plceo had torn
Jack's side, and ho hadn't ten minutes
to live. Ills eyes were wide open as I
pushed along to hint witli my canteen.
Jlo drank from it, rnlscd himself on his
elbow, and steadily Inquired:
How hud Is It with moP"
"I am afraid ,mu are mortally lilt."
"I feel it. tjomu u bit nearer, for I
want to talk to you. Do you mind
"when 1 enmu to the company?"
"Yes; It wns two years ago."
"I'vo been n pretty had man for
my years," he resumed, "and thorn Is
olio deed I want to ntonc for In this,
my dving hour. Up In Indiana, about
three miles from the village of It ,
you'll tiud u family named .
You'll get over your hurt, nnd you'll
heo tlio end of this war, and I ask you
to go there. Thero's a gray-haired
father u broken hearted mother, and
n fair ()iing gill wlio ought to have
boon my wife. (!od can't forgive mu
for the misery and sorrow I wrought
there, not do 1 deservu It. I ran uwny
and joined tho army to cscaixi the run
genco that men threatened to inflict,
und I have not had an hour of peacu
since. It weighs on my mind now in
my dying hour like a mill-stone."
"I will go thero If I am spared."
"Hero hi this Inner pocket you will
llud my atonement moiie. It Is till
I cm do. I have $1,000, which lias
comu no ono need ask how, ami I want
that to go as far as money can go to
bring siiushlmi to a ruined life."
Over us swept ball, and bullet, nnd
r-lidl. Around us mull shouted, mill
cheered, and groaned, lie reached for
my hand, and I gavo It to hliu, but it
was hnrdly a inliuitn before Ids grasp
rulnxed, and I knew that ho was dead.
It was n summer's day when I rodo
out from It . 1 had asked no ques
tion. My mission was ono tho world
(diould not know of. I knew tho farm
houso at a glance, but as I hitched my
horse at the gato I looked in vain for
nny signs of life about. Thero wero roses
climbing up the weather-beaten posts,
but no hand had trained them. Tlio
garden had grown to weeds the grass
had almost concealed the doorstep, and
I put my faco to tho window-panes to
find tho moms vacant. I wns wonder
ing nnd puzzling when shirt-sleeved,
miu-brnwued man camo from the ad
joining Held and said:
"Tho place is vacant and htu boon
for a year."
"And tho folks?"
"Come with me."
Wo enmed the highway and entered
n graveyard. There, under tlio spread
lug brandies of n maple, wero threo
graves, on which the gills' had not yet
taken root.
"Killed murdered deadl"ho tierce
lv exclaimed. "They could not stand
tno shame of It and their hearts wero
broken. The villain who caused this
,ould "
"He Is dead as uelll"
There aiti four heaiMoncs nnd four
graves there now, nnd neat fence
keeps the feet of the woild olV that
sacred ground. I could not bring
lack's body there, but 1 made him n
grave beside tlio one who should havo
been his wife tho one wlion forgive
ness he asked in the last worth that
camo fiom bis lips. His dying gift,
htalued with his own blood, could do
no mqiv. i'miitV Smith in Iktroit iV
a a
Klio i:njo)ol tlio Picture.
A lady who ivildes on Delaware nvo
nuo has' n gill in her employ fivsli from
miiiio region far returned from the the
ater. Thinking to glo the girl a
grand treat, and knowing that she had
never seen a theater, the lady purchas
ed a ticket for a play at thooper.i-houe.
The gill went, but returned before t)
o'clock. "What is the niatterP Did
you not like it?" nked the mtstress.
Oh, I liked It ever so much; It's a tine
painting." "Hut," Inquired her ml
tre.is, "why have you returned so toon?
Suivly you did not see It all." "Yes,
ma'am 1 did. I went In and sat down
and looked ut the largo picture hang
ing up in front, l'eoplo kept coming
in and pretty soon I he it) was quite u
crowd, ail looking tit the picture. Then
they took It away, and some men and
women went to talking up there whew
it had Wen about comethlug that didn't
concern me, mi 1 got up and camo
home. Hut I enjoyed tho picture."
Wilmington (M.) Xiwt.
I ! I !
Telephoning between Now York and
rhlladelphln is now ns easy us it was
between points a block upait a few
mouths ugo.
Confederate Women.
"Tho southern confederacy turned
out n host of handsome women," said
an old soldier to a representative of tho
St Louis Republican. "Yes, sir!" You
talk nowadays about handsome women,
hut you ought to have seen them dur
ing the war1. C4en. John Morgan mar
ried tho prettiest girl InTenncssce.nnd,
If I am not greatly mistaken, she Is yet
living, nnd still bcnutlful. She was n
Miss Iloady. Her father lived at Mur
freosboro ami wns a prominent lawyer
of that soctlon forty years ago. Miss
Heady was a rebel an out-and-outer.
Sho lured John Morgan because ho was
n daring, brilliant, nnd bravo man; nnd
so sho married him. One year later ho
was killed, nnd I heard that tho tragedy
broko her heart. Sho was a marvel
lously beautiful woman that sort of
beauty which can not be reproduced In
a photograph, nnd can only bo suggest
ed in an oil painting. Mrs. Morgan
had a lino figure, and eyes which could
melt or annihilnto you, just ns her emo
tion dictated. Tcnncssco has turned
out thousands of pretty womon, but
few have over equaled in statuesquo
beauty tlio handsome widow of Gen.
John Morgan.
"Then there was tho wife of Gon. J.
E. II. Stuart. Sho was a Miss Elora
Cooke, daughter of Col. Phillip St.
George Cooke, of tho 2d dragoons.
Tho wedding took place, I think, at
Fort Itlloy, Nov. 11, 1865, nnd It wns
ono of tho swellcst affairs of tho army
of that day. Stuart .was then only Ti
years of age, and had just bcon np
polutcd regimental quartermaster nnd
commlssnry ut Fort Leavenworth, while
his father-in-law was commandant of
tho Fort Itlloy post. Tho western
country boasted few handsomer girls
than Flora Cooko nnd fewer finer-looking
mntrons than Mrs. Stuart. I honr
she Is now n teacher in n young ladies'
seminary in Virginia, and that her
daughter, Miss Virginia l'elham Stuart,
has fallen heir to much of hor mother's
beauty.
"I never met Mrs. Ileaurcgard, but
friends tell mu that sho iiad all tho bril
liant qualities of a French woman und
all tho languorous beauty of tho south.
Sho was tall and graceful, nnd elegant
in her speech and manners. Sho had
sparkling black oyes, iv wealth of coal
black hair, nnd in nil respects was a
highly-accomplished woman. I don't
think Gen. Dcuurcgard has ever entire
ly recovered from tlio shock of hor
(loath. I mot him last year on his visit
to St Louis, nnd hy spoke of his wife
with affectionate tenderness. Hers
was n typo of beauty seldom soon out
side of Louisiana, nnd I fancy she
must hnvo niiulo n very popular Impres
sion in tho wido circle of society in
which herself nnd hor husband moved.
"I cannot say that any of thu ladles
of Mr. Leu's household wero particular
ly beautiful. They wero all flue-looking
even to Mrs. Lee, who wns an In
valid throughout tho war. Miss Mary
Lee, the General's second daughter, is
now nbout 3ft years old, n plain, unpre
tentious woman, having great force of
character and that gentle dignity which
nil tho Lees possessed. Miss Mildred
Lee, tho eldest daughter, travels n great
deal, I hear, and Is seldom seen in this
country, but sho sometimes visits her
brother, Gen. 0. W. C. Lee, at Lexing
ton, Va. Hoth Miss Mildred and Miss
Mary uro great favorites witli tho neo
pin of Virginia, not merely on their
father's account but because of tho
quiet charity and sympathy which have
ulwnvs characterized them.
'flie second wife of Jcflcrson Davit
wns a splendid appearing woman in
her youth, and I have no doubt sho li
yet tine looking. Sho was a Miss Vnr
inn Howell, ill)'1 I think sho whs born
in Georgia, though her father's family
lived many yours in New Orleans. She
is of Welsh descent, but had mors
marks of beauty than is generally ac
corded to women who have imuxdi
ntely descendod from Wales. I.remom
her when Mr. Davis visited tills city
about thirteen jears ago, ho was ac
companied by one of his sons, then a
grown young man. I was casually In
troduced to tho latter, and when I said
to him: "How much yon resemble
your mother, sir," he grasped my hand
again and said with sudden earnestness,
Thank you. You don't know how
tired I am of having people tell mo how
much I resemble 'aeliary Taylor.' Tho
point the joke Is, ns you probably
know, that Mr. Davis had no children
by Ids lliit wife the daughter of Gen.
'I nylor nnd a groat many people had
aired their Ignorance b "greeting Mr.
Davis' son us the grundMHi of tho old
Mexican hew."
Horn Witli a HonUkln.
Now that plated ware has lwcoino so
plentiful and cheap, tho old expression,
"born with n silver spoon in his
mouth," goes out of date. Silver is
not so tempting a thing us It used to
lie, except when the mint has struck it,
although solid silver still menus nn
uw ful lot. Wo might now say "born
with a gold spoon," nnd not mean
very much. Fortunes nro growing so
largo that there seems no extravagance
in the supposition that tho next cen
tury will bco them go into thu billions
of 'dollars. What was Vanderbllt's?
iiii ,000,000; and it would bo hard to
put the wealth of tho Hothschlld family
with its ramifications on paper. Hut
ovorylsMly in Ameivia might without
exaggeration bo said to bo born witli
n silver spoon us compared with Ku
ropeun communities. Hut tho San
Francisco girl has got out an expres
sion which will probably prove moro
oxpivsslvo than nny.
"Yes," said a poor young lady, dis
cussing tho daughter of a rich man;
Lottie- was born with tv sealskin."
San iYancuco CsrontVfe.
MISSINGLINKS.
The Trlnce of Wales has becomo an
expert banjo player.
Serpent skin is coming into fashion
as n covering for books.
A Chinaman has opened up a news
stand at San Bernardino, Cal.
In Napa county, California, wino can
bo obtained at 18 cents a gallon.
A Boston chess player owns n set of
chessmen that nro over 108 years old.
A citlzon of Montgomery, Ala., hns
boon in tho etty jail fifteen years for
drunkonncss. Ho is 30 years old.
Exactly 160 lives hnvo been lost so
fnr In tho construction of tho now
Croton aqueduct, near Now York city.
Miss Chamberlain, finding so much
competition In Englnnd in tlio pro
fessional American beauty business, is
coming homo to stay.
"Tho spcctaclo of n $10,000 lawyer
nrgulng beforo n 2,000 Judge should
bo prohibited in Georgia ns indecent,"
says a Georgia contemporary.
A Michigan man cut off n six-inch
limb sixty feet from tlio ground by
firing at it, tho job requiring slxty
sovon bullets. Ho was aftor honoy.
A houso in Philadelphia, Pa., is
noted for being tlio birthplace of tall
men. Ever' person born under Its
roof has reached tho height of six feet
Tho Queen of Itoumanln, nlroady nn
eminent poet, hns engaged .to deliver ft
courso of lectures on "Modern Litera
ture" noxt year at tho Bucharest high
school. A Wllllamsport (I'd.) tnnnhas a pair
of antlers measuring five foot between
tho tips, which were taken from tho
head of n buck killed on Pino creek
recently.
Charles Frcund, a truck-driver of
Savannah, claims to have fallen heir to
a trltlo of $12,000,000, left him by a
cousin of Ids father who lately died in
Paraguay.
Tlio longest span of wlro In tho world
is used for a telegraph in India over
tho river Kistnnh. It is moro than six
thousand feet in length und is twelve
hundred feet high.
In tho record of marriages of Christ
church, Philadelphia, under dato of
March 6, 176G, Js found that of John
Codd nnd Mnry Fish, tho ceremony
being performed by Itov. William
Sturgeon.
Gov. Swinoford makes tho startling
assertion that tho white population of
Alaska has moro than doubled in
eighteen months; yet tho Alaska boom
has scarcely bcon perceptible to tho un
assisted optic.
Joel Clinndler Harris (Undo Remus)
is tv son of tlio Into Judge Harris of
Kuoxvllle, Teiiu., who was thu author
of tho "Sut Llvengood" sketches, fa
mous among tho lovers of humor some
thirty years ago.
A Philadelphia gossip lamonts the
fact that thero aro so many tall girls in
fashionable society, and tlio nvnilablo
men aro ns a rule so small in stature
that somu of tho girls will have to
"stoop to conquer."
Itov. Solomon Jones, who for tho
past fifty years litis preached tho gospel
to the colored people in Houston
county, Tennessco, has been recently
sentenced to three years in tho statu
pouitei.tiary for arson.
Miss li. Maude Merrill of Bucksport
Center, Me., has received a personal
letter of thanks nnd commendation
from Gen. Grant's prlvuto secretary for
tho best poem on the General's death
that tho family received.
During tho past year $t:t,'-'8t,980
was expended for educational purposes
in tho Stato of New York. Of this
amount $9,102,268 was for teachers'
wuires. Thero aro 31,325 school teach-
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gold pieces, nnd thought ho was sud
denly enriched to tho amount of $30,
000. But nn application of ncld show
ed tho metal to bo mainly copper, and
suddenly his feelings fell to zero.
In California, writes a correspond
ent, every collection of animals of any
sort is called a "band." A herd of
cattle, a flock of sheep, a party of In
dians anything nnd everything tint
walks when seen in numbers, is
known ns n band, and It is regarded as
a suro sign of being a "tenderfoot" to
uso nny other term.
Tho island of Juan Fcrnnndoz is to
bo rendered of more practical value
than it wns In tho days of Iloblnson
Crusoe. An enterprising individual In
Valparaiso advertises that ho will run
a steamer so ns to enable all to pass a
vacation there who wish to cscapo the
chances of cholera In Valparaiso.
Dr. Edward H. Lclllngwcll of Now
Haven, Conn,, now over 80 years of
age, has n collection of nutogrnphsund
engraved portraits for which ho has
paid not less than $20,000. In early
life ho was professor of toxicology In a
Missouri college. He subsequently
visited Pom, whero he married a lady
of high family.
A Boston nrtlst tells this story of
Whistler nnd Oscar Wilde, who has tho
reputation of borrowing Whistler's
bright speeches. Having heard the
nrtlst say an unusually good thing,
Oscar exclaimed, deplorlnglyt "I wish
I could have said that" "O," re
plied Whistler, derisively, "but you
know you will say It."
A young man, ono of a party of
hunters In Colorado, left camp to go
out nnd set n trap. Ho did not return
in duo time, und search was mado for
b!m. It was six days beforo ho wns
found, and then it was seen that in sot
ting tho trap both hands had been
caught In It, and thus ho had been hold
until ho wns frozen to death.
Jim Urownlow's Onllnnt Deed.
"I remember a splendid font of
nrms," said nn old Senator to-day.
"At tho time Gen. Stoncmau mado his
awful fiasco whllo on n raid insido of
tho Confederate lines, nnd surrendered
his entire outfit, Including himself, to
a forco inferior in numbers, mado up
principally of thu hollyhock, sassafras,
ginseng, and hoopholo forces under tho
command of tho Falstall of tho Rebel
lion Howell Cobb thero was per
formed it feat of nrms by it young sol
dier of East Tennessee which was un
paralleled In tho history of tho war on
either side, nnd ono that called forth
tho nppluuso of even Longstrcct nnd
tho veterans ho commanded. Finding
himself, ns ho supposed, entirely sur
rounded by n superior force, Stoncman
determined to surrender, though, for
form's snko, ho concluded to hold a
council with his regiment nnd brigado
commnnders. Among thoso command
ing n regiment in Stonemau's fofco
was young Jim Brownlow, son of Gov.
Brownlow, tlio fighting parson. When
young Brownlow appeared beforo his
commander, being tlio youngest regi
mental commander present, Gen. Stonu
mau informed him that he intended to
surrender, and linked liim what ho
thought of it. Young Brownlow ob
jected, and said there was no neces
sity for It He was overruled, how
ever, und then ho demanded tho privi
lege of cutting his way out wlUi his
regiment, it lie could, for ho and his
men knew that If they wero captured
they could expect uo mercy, for they
would bo treated ns traitors to tho
South. However, he was told to cut
his way out if lie could. Sweeping tho
Rebel circle with his field-glass he
thought ho could dctrot a weak place
in it at one point. Riding up to the
bend of Ids ngiment ho announced to
his men that they must either cut their
way out or starve to dentil In n Rebel
prison, and naked them to decide nt
onco what they would do. With n
shout they demanded to be led against
thu foo. Ordering his men to draw
sabres nnd follow him, like a thunder
bolt tho thousand mountaineers hurled
themselves htralgbt at the weak spot;
but they weie rcpuUod. Again they
tried it, I'lid again they wero hurled
back. Forming his men again for the
third time, the fe.irlc.s young leader
told them that there mujt bo uo more
recoiling; that they miut get out or
die. Once moro tho charge was sound
ed, nnd straight as nn arrow young
Brownlow hurled himself and his men
nt the Rebel Hue and broko it us a
whirlwind. Longstrcet came up just
ns the first charge was repulsed, and
saw the whole affair from beginning to
finish. He asked who the Union lead
er was, and was told. Then ho inquired
If Col. Brownlow had been educated nt
West Point. Ho wns answered In tho
negative, w hen ho said: That young
man is a natural soldier, mid that is
tho finest feat of anus I over witnessed.
Any regiment may break through an
encircling lino on tlio first charge and
thus get nway, but to bo repulsed twice
and AtiU peteveiv, nnd succeed in tho
t hi nl effort, is ti feat almost unparal
leled in the hl-tory of war.' The story
of that day's gallant action will bo ro
meinbered ami rehearsed in tho moun
tains of East Tennessee as long ns tho
memory of tho great Rebellion shall bo
preserved among men. Col. Brown
low wiib a chip oft tho old block, sure."
H"ii.Aitiytot J.dtcr in Imliauajolis
Journal.
Boston has a gymnasium exclusively
for the use of women. It has six bowl
ing alleys tennis court, a gymna
sium halt, a running track of twenty
laps to the mile, hot and cold water
baths, etc. It was projected by Miss
Mary Allen, who has for yeans boon a
dsTotee of physical culture. It is well
patrouiccd.
4 small cupful of
or strained oaGY
add Zie.ashoonfuls'
ti&faofti
d5oojifuf of
V f f
Tz. nptfuriipyoiA
4& QysRi
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t. Dccili. MortffUff.
lit ftlfkA nt AAa.
Ilandi. tc. and 411
Ifonu Tor Circuit. rroDiue, twunij ina juiuccs
Lvu.-i. a fn tiuvC an, I lull ftrtntln- tlwiV tdnillnv
iiunk lioon,of nytning in mo mining or hook-
MUillVI IVI IIWVH ! wvu ItH-HIII livvanxviMK,
MADE
IWAITK, Slum nook and
Mndlnr Une. mdi! 10 E. M.
Isuta ilrctt, tJiLxx, Oregon.
Job rnnitr ami nooibiniicr.
SEDGWICK STEEL WIRE FENCE.
The belt Firm, Garden, Poultry Yard. Lawn,
School Lot, Park and Cemetery Fences and Gatei.
Perfect Automatic Gate. Cheapen and NeatMt
Iron Fences. Iron and wire Summer Houses, Lawm
Furniture, and other wire work. Pest Wire Stretch
er and Pller. Atk dealers in hardware, or addrcis,
8EDQW1CK BROS., RICHMOND, INO.
EVERY FARIYIk.&
THE BEST A HIS OWN
Is the HRsa MILLER
CHEAPEST.
.ua32 years Eiperlence.
Cm lb. ItaUadar Sio.J.rJ (!rnrd Wla.l II III. I.X.L
r HktIUr ! l..l. Iron ftcl Mill III trar lll-
Itf SBliU4tlCtlfefe. Illy, airlM 141 t t'llf l "I
fm Lha flri.t If IlL Th.li i.k c.k !. A n rilar. ,
l3f UM.
ha Ml-door -fl U Mir!,! i In rtrr, T& mm will
vlllttt tera tulki, aw al, rua cburu si.4 trial idw, yuf
ur, tu.
Vt r.otJUr ik !Uaitir NtanilarJ OmhI aai
PaMBUst WIk.I Mlllsl.X.I. (Vira Hkrllcra. I.X.L Iraa
ri Mllli, I.X.L Hlalk Cytlera. Hmm r.fri,Juli
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DEDERICKG HAYPrtJ.OES.
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